Mayor Melton Files To Run For Second Term
Mayor Frank Melton Files to Run Again
Mayor Frank Melton Files to Run Again
Four years after Frank Melton took charge at City Hall, is the Capital City better off or worse off?
Jeremy Graham says “I wouldn’t say its worse off because of him.”
While Frank Thompson thinks “people got discouraged on how he handled some things.”
“If they let him do what he wanted to do it would probably be better off. It still needs a lot of work,” says Mary Johnson, a lifelong Jacksonian.
She voted for Melton and supports his unique crime fighting tactics, which lead to his federal indictment for allegedly ordering the destruction of what he called a “crack house” on Ridgeway Street.
But not everyone supports the mayor’s bid for a second term.
Thompson says, “with all he’s been through I really would step aside myself”
“He’s not really the role model people are looking for at this time I don’t think he’s gonna do well if he ran,” Graham says.
Some of the mayor’s critics say since he has so little to show in the way of accomplishments for the past four years, many voters may be unlikely to give him a second term. Still those critics admit even when the chips are down, you never bet against Frank Melton.
Reader Reactions
I am originally from Louisiana.And in Baton Rouge there is a law that states if someone is using/distributing drugs in a home that home is automacally taken and sold at public auction.This is done with or without the owners consent.So based on that law mayor Frank Melton should not be retried.Maybe his defense attorney needs to look at the law that i mention above and maybe this matter can come to a close.
I used to do home health in neighborhoods like the one with this particular crack house and do not live in Jackson. The sad thing about this situation is that the elderly are the ones suffering. They bought houses in these places when all was good, can’t afford to leave, and are taken advantage of with these run down or abandoned houses in their neighborhood. The land lord of these slums don’t care who they rent to or what goes on as long as the money is coming in. the elderly and disabled are actually afraid for their life and should not have to live this way. Why hasn’t the current administration backed Mr. Melton up with new laws that would put an end to this problem in every neighborhood in a timely matter? It is so sad that we are concentrating on the wrong thing here and not getting to the root of the problem.



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